Jump to content

The Eye (2002 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2601:100:897e:4b0:51e9:bae6:f9ac:5fce (talk) at 13:13, 4 July 2024 (Plot). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Eye
Hong Kong film poster
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese見鬼
Simplified Chinese见鬼
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinJiàn Guǐ
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingGin3 Gwai2
Directed byPang brothers
Written byJojo Hui
Pang brothers
Produced byPeter Chan
Lawrence Cheng
StarringAngelica Lee
Lawrence Chou
Chutcha Rujinanon
CinematographyDecha Seementa
Edited byPang brothers
Music byOrange Music
Production
company
Applause Pictures
Distributed byMediacorp Raintree Pictures
Release dates
  • 9 May 2002 (2002-05-09) (Hong Kong)
  • 27 June 2002 (2002-06-27) (Singapore)
Running time
98 minutes
CountriesHong Kong
Singapore[1]
LanguagesCantonese[1]
Mandarin
Thai
BudgetSG$4,500,000
Box officeHK$13,733,856[1]

The Eye, also known as Seeing Ghosts, is a 2002 Hong Kong-Singaporean horror film directed by the Pang brothers. The film spawned two sequels by the Pang brothers, The Eye 2 and The Eye 10. There are three remakes of this film, including Adhu, made in 2004 in Tamil, Naina made in 2005 in Hindi and The Eye, a 2008 Hollywood production starring Jessica Alba.

Plot

Blind since the age of 5, 20-year-old Hong Kong classical violinist Wong Kar Mun undergoes an eye cornea transplant after receiving a pair of new eyes from a donor. Initially, she is glad to have her sight restored but becomes troubled when she starts seeing mysterious figures that seem to foretell gruesome deaths. The night before her discharge from the hospital, she sees a shadowy figure accompanying a patient out of the room, and the next morning, the patient is pronounced dead.

Mun goes to see her doctor's nephew, Dr. Wah, a psychotherapist, about the strange entities that she has been seeing. He is initially skeptical, but as he gradually develops a closer relationship with her, he decides to accompany her to northern Thailand to find Ling, the eye donor. When they ask a village doctor about Ling and her family, he is unwilling to reveal anything but becomes more cooperative when Mun tells him that she sees what Ling used to see. Ling had a psychic ability that allowed her to foresee death and disaster. However, her fellow villagers misunderstood her as a jinx and refused to trust her. Once, Ling tried to warn the people about an imminent disaster, but they drove her away in disbelief. When her vision came true, she felt guilty about the tragedy and hanged herself. Ling's mother is both depressed and angry with her daughter and has never forgiven Ling for committing suicide until one night, Ling's spirit possesses Mun and attempts suicide. Ling's mother saves Mun and breaks down, saying she has forgiven Ling, and Ling's spirit leaves in peace.

On the return journey, their bus is caught in a traffic jam, and Mun sees hundreds of ghostly figures lumbering on the road. Believing that a catastrophe is approaching, she runs out of the bus and tries to warn everyone to leave, but no one understands her and thinks she is insane. The traffic jam is due to a tank truck that has toppled over and is blocking the road. The truck starts leaking natural gas, but nobody notices it. A driver restarts his engine and ignites the gas, causing a chain explosion. Dr. Wah saves Mun from death by shielding her with his body, but Mun is already blinded by glass fragments. In the epilogue, a blind Mun is seen roaming the streets of Hong Kong. Although she has lost her sense of sight again, she is happy that she now has the support and friendship of Dr. Wah.

Cast

  • Angelica Lee as Wong Kar Mun
    • Cusnithorn Chotiphan as young Mun
  • Lawrence Chou as Dr. Wah
  • Chutcha Rujinanon as Chiu Wai-ling
    • Tassanana Nuntasaree as Ling (4 years old)
    • Damronowiseeatpanich as Ling (8 years old)
  • So Yat-lai as Yingying
  • Candy Lo as Yee (Mun's sister)
    • Dampcingcingtrakulsawadee as young Yee
  • Ko Yin-ping as Mun's grandmother
  • Pierre Png as Dr Eak
  • Edmund Chen as Dr Lo

Production

The Eye is a co-production of MediaCorp Raintree Pictures in Singapore and Applause Pictures of Hong Kong, and was shot in Hong Kong and Thailand with a pan-Asian cast and crew, including Malaysian actress Angelica Lee, Chinese-Canadian singer Lawrence Chou, Singaporean singer-actor Pierre Png and Thai actress Chutcha Rujinanon.[2] The crew included Thai cinematographer Decha Seementa and the Thai music collective Orange Music provided the score.

Danny and Oxide Pang said they were inspired to write the screenplay for The Eye by a report they had seen in a Hong Kong newspaper 13 years before, about a 16-year-old girl who had received a corneal transplant and committed suicide soon after.

Oxide said in an interview: "We'd always wondered what the girl saw when she regained her eyesight finally and what actually made her want to end her life".[3]

At the end, the scene with the accident, is based on an actual event from Bangkok gas explosion on New Petchburi Road on 24 September 1990.[4] It killed 88 people, injured 36 people, 67 cars were destroyed and total damage was 215 million baht.

Release

The Eye was released in Hong Kong on 9 May 2002 and in Singapore on 27 June. In the Philippines, the film was released on 5 February 2003.[5]

Critical reception

The review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes offers an approval rating of 64% based on 104 reviews, with an average rating of 6.1/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Conventional ghost tale with a few genuine scares".[6] The film has a score of 66 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 26 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[7]

Box office

The film was released in the United States and Canada in 13 cinemas on 6 June 2003, grossing $122,590 its opening weekend. In those countries, the film's widest release was 23 theatres and it eventually grossed a total $512,049.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "The Eye". Hong Kong Film Archive. Hong Kong. Retrieved 4 May 2013.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Ho, Karl. 9 August 2002. "Eyeing a trend", Straits Times/Asia News Network via Nation Weekend, page 8 (print edition).
  3. ^ Ho, Karl. 9 August 2002. "Seeing dead people", Straits Times/Asia News Network via Nation Weekend, page 8 (print edition).
  4. ^ Ancuta, Katarzyna (2016). "That's the Spirit!: Horror Films as an Extension of Thai Supernaturalism". Ghost Movies in Southeast Asia and Beyond: Narratives, Cultural Contexts, Audiences. BRILL. p. 127. ISBN 9789004323643. ...turned to the infamous 1990 LPG tanker explosion on New Petchabure Rd. in Bangkok for inspiration.
  5. ^ "Opens Today!". Philippine Daily Inquirer. The Philippine Daily Inquirer, Inc. 5 February 2003. p. A30. Archived from the original on 8 September 2022. Retrieved 8 September 2022. Flash! Flash! Flash! 'The Eye' is currently breaking box office records in every territory in Asia- making it the most successful horror film of all time!!
  6. ^ "Gin gwai (The Eye) (2002)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Archived from the original on 29 November 2017. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  7. ^ "The Eye (2003) Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 20 June 2018. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  8. ^ "The Eye (2003) (2003) – Weekend Box Office". Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 9 December 2008. Retrieved 14 October 2007.